salsa
Senior Member
And yet Chow says it shouldn't be an election issue.
That doesn't mean she doesn't support it.
And yet Chow says it shouldn't be an election issue.
That doesn't mean she doesn't support it.
The article is so dramatic though. All it's saying is that they need more to begin the early EA. I expect city council will make the right decision.
And then there's the smart ones, who are just walking to Liberty and Atlantic to jump on the suprisingly frequent and speedy 63 Ossington bus to Ossington station (and north on Ossington and Oakwood to Eglinton West station). It's always faster post-game than the Bathurst streetcar, and I'm yet to not fit on the first one (heck, normally I even get a seat).I agree....if you observe people leaving BMO Field the two most prevalent patterns is people going to the GO station or people walking under it to get to Liberty Village.....those people split into 3 groups once in LV...those who parked there and are going to their cars...those that are going there for a post match meal/drink and those that are headed to King Street to catch a streetcar either east or west.
What could "planners" possibly be planning except maybe funding their retirement portfolios by stretching out this phase of the delightfully nebulous project that has fallen into their laps.
No one knows the final route or class of equipment to be purchased and operated or the time frame or anything else, just that they are making out like bandits and being encouraged to continue to do so.
Here's a thought, only when all the base parameters are agreed upon and carved in stone do we start studies and estimates as is done in the real world where real money is being spent.
And yet Chow says it shouldn't be an election issue.
She's still right.
The current council needs to decide whether to fund the accelerated EA (decision takes place long before the new council will have a choice). The "slow" option is waiting for the next council to present a budget with EA funding included; the only way the new mayor has input is through the delayed option.
Second, funding of actual construction is a provincial problem. The new mayor can support, or not, Metrolinx's tax scheme but that decision should be finalized within the next month, again long before the new council is in place. Keeping those tax changes will be a provincial election issue.
The new mayor might choose to kill Scarborough subway in order to provide funding room for the DRL on the cities books but the city still can't go it alone.
In short, the DRL either will or won't happen before the municipal election takes place or will be severely hamstrung by events outside their control. The new mayor is not going to be given a choice on the matter; it's not an election issue for them.
They can have an opinion, but the opinion of the next mayor has far less weight than the opinion of your MPP.
The Stintz "lets reorganize everything" proposal is probably best for the long-term but is bound to cause a 2 to 3 year delay during restructuring (defining process takes forever). We've seen this kind of delay before due to amalgamation; it took 2 to 6 years for various departments to start running at full speed again.
Unless, you know, Toronto pulls up its pants and actually comes up with a plan to fund transit so that they're not always at the mercy of funding from higher levels of government.
Yeah, a 10% property tax hike for transit (in addition to usual hikes) would be something the mayor could do and that would be an election issue. No candidate has considered this.
Scarborough subway, downtown LRTs, and TTC SOGR work put us well beyond our current borrowing capacity at current tax rates. The hike needs to be significant to catch up on maintenance, committed projects, and allow additional expansion.
In fact, no mayoral candidate has a funding strategy for keeping the basics maintained (keep tunnels from collapsing, pipes from bursting, trains from derailing, etc.). I can't blame Chow or Tory for not having something for that; but both Ford and Stintz should be very aware of the SOGR shortfall (5% property tax increase by itself).
SOGR and operational aren't the sexy platforms that a new subway line (or LRT line, or name whatever project) are/is. The projects allow politicians to show up for ribbon cutting and shovel turning so that they can ape for the camera and news coverage. SOGR while the meat and potatoes of the network simply don't provide the same opportunity for politician.